Daredevil Villains #52: The Ani-Men II
DAREDEVIL #157-158 (March-May 1979)
“The Ungrateful Dead” / “A Grave Mistake”
Writers: Roger McKenzie (#157-158) with Mary Jo Duffy (#157)
Pencillers: Gene Colan (#157) and Frank Miller (#158)
Inker: Klaus Janson
Colourist: Glynis Wein (#157) and George Roussos (#158)
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Editor: Al Milgrom
The second iteration of the Ani-Men only just about merit inclusion in this feature. They’re supporting players in the a Death-Stalker story, and a retread of an idea from the 1960s. But they scrape their way in because the second part is the debut of Frank Miller on art – and because there are only two real candidates for inclusion the whole Roger McKenzie run.
McKenzie takes over with issue #151, and his run offers the Purple Man (#151 and #154), Death-Stalker (#152 and #155-158), Mr Hyde and the Cobra (#153), Bullseye (#159-161) and guest villain Dr Octopus (#165-166). Issue #162 is a fill-in. Issue #163 has no villain – the Hulk guest stars to serve as the antagonist. And issue #164 is mostly a recap of Daredevil’s origin story. And that’s it. That’s the whole run. Bear in mind that the book is bimonthly at this point, so that’s two years of mostly retread villains.
This run does introduce Ben Urich, a genuinely major character who debuts in issue #153. He spends this run figuring out Daredevil’s dual identity and then deciding to keep it secret anyway. The run also introduces Becky Blake, a wheelchair-using lawyer, who promptly disappears into the background.
Charts – 2 May 2025
A decent range of new entries this week…
Seven weeks. And its streams are up this week (a bit). This is the longest run at number 1 since “Stick Season” last year, though “Stick Season” is obviously the more interesting record. It still has a massive lead over the number 2 single “Pink Pony Club” – a margin of over 80%.
11. Lorde – “What Was That”
This is the lead single from her upcoming album, and she’s electropop now. It works, though. Lorde is not a consistent presence in the singles chart – she can usually get a lead single into the top 40 but the follow-ups tend not to. Number 11 is high for her, though – she hasn’t been this high since her debut, “Royals”, reached number 1 in 2013. The flashmob performance in Washington Square Park at the end of the video is apparently legit – those are actual fans turning up for the shoot.
The X-Axis – w/c 28 April 2025
ASTONISHING X-MEN INFINITY COMIC #19. By Tim Seeley, Edoardo Audino, KJ Díaz & Clayton Cowles. It’s a fairly quiet week for the X-books, with one ongoing title, a couple of minis, and this. Yes, I know the FCBD book is out at the weekend, but we’ll cover that when it reaches Unlimited. This is the first part of “I Have Seen Tomorrow”, and the book continues to alternate between its two creative teams. This time, however, Tim Seeley takes up the baton of Alex Paknadel’s Generation X reunion, and starts setting up a storyline about an influencer platforming anti-mutant types in a “just asking questions” way. For whatever reason, Seeley’s take on these characters clicks a little better for me – he writes more convincing banter, I think – and Audino’s art is a bit more dynamic too. But it also pulls off a nice cliffhanger that I didn’t see coming. Good start.
NYX #10. (Annotations here.) And that’s another cancelled title. Still, never mind, I’m sure they’ll announce another Wolverine team-up book to replace it. Have we tried Wolverine / Wolverine yet? We do have a spare!
NYX #10 annotations
NYX vol 2 #10
Writers: Jackson Lanzing & Collin Kelly
Artist: Francesco Mortarino
Colour artist: Raúl Angulo
Letterer: Joe Sabino
Editor: Annalise Bissa
This is the final issue of NYX. The Laura Kinney: Wolverine ongoing series continues, and Ms Marvel’s storyline will be picked up in the upcoming Giant-Size X-Men one-shots.
THE CORE CAST
Ms Marvel. She’s preoccupied about cousin Bilal hunting down Ms Marvel and trying to find out her true identity, back in issue #7. As the only cast member with a dual identity, she offers a traditional superhero argument for keeping a secret identity, i.e. to prevent her family being used against her. But David seems to read her as being at least as concerned about what her family will think, and he seems to be right. He also argues that she’s been too concerned about protecting her family, and not enough about the impact on herself of living a dual life.
Ultimately, she reveals her true identity to Bilal (see below). Later, she tells her family that she’s heard that Ms Marvel is taking a break for a while because she “doesn’t want to live as a mutant”, though she seems to be fishing for them to agree with her that this would be “sad”. In fact, they don’t seem to have very strong feelings on it at all, beyond her father Yusuf musing that Ms Marvel’s parents would probably be relieved if she quit.
Daredevil Villains #51: Smasher
DAREDEVIL #149 (November 1977)
“Catspaw!”
Writer: Jim Shooter
Penciller: Carmine Infantino
Inker, colourist: Klaus Janson
Letterer: Denise Wohl
Editor: Archie Goodwin
Marv Wolfman is gone, and next up is Jim Shooter, whose short run lasts from issues #144 to #151. Even some of those are co-written: the first two are co-credited to Gerry Conway, while the last sees him hand over to incoming writer Roger McKenzie. By this point, Daredevil is floundering. With issue #147, the book is relegated to a bimonthly schedule, and it’s going to stay there until the 1980s.
This is the only Shooter issue that we’ll be covering, since the rest of his run relies on existing villains: the Man-Bull (#144), the Owl (#145), Bullseye (#146), Death-Stalker (#148) and the Purple Man (everything else).
There were reasons for this. For one thing, on Shooter’s own account, he was generally averse to creating new characters on Marvel’s 1970s work-for-hire terms – although he did introduce Paladin as a supporting character in issue #150. But in any event, Shooter’s top priority was to tie up some storylines that had been left unresolved by Marv Wolfman.
Charts – 25 April 2025
Basically a dead week on both the singles and albums charts, but let’s run through them anyway.
That’s six weeks. It’s now two weeks past its peak but retains a massive lead over “Pink Pony Club” at number 2, and the top 3 is static, with “Azizam” at 3.
25. Addison Rae – “Headphones On”
A second top 40 hit to follow “Diet Pepsi”, which reached number 10 last year. Two other singles have missed the top 40 since then, but this charts immediately in its first week out. The Lana Del Rey influence is less pronounced on this one, which is a rather dreamy dance track.
The X-Axis – w/c 21 April 2025
X-MEN #15. (Annotations here.) No Infinity Comic this week – the pattern seems to be that we skip a week between arcs. So instead, we’re straight into this middle chapter of the twin storyline. And it’s very much a middle chapter, with Quentin still missing and a lot of running around as we keep the evil twin busy. Its new giant monster body is a little comical, but at the end of the day it’s there to be manipulated by 3K, and the real point of this story is to start bringing them into the foreground. It does that well enough, and Ryan Stegman does a nice cuddly monster full of teeth. I don’t think the final page cliffhanger, with the appearance of the rival X-Men, quite works, since we’ve not seen these guys in costume before and it takes a moment to figure out that they’re meant to be the 3K guys from issue #1. Plus, to be honest, my first thought was that the one with dialogue was meant to be Ben Liu until I realised that the hair colour was wrong. They’re nice designs, though, and seem to play to Stegman’s strengths by being a little off-kilter, particularly the floating guy in the containment suit.
X-FORCE #10. (Annotations here.) Oh lord. This is a premature cancellation, and with issue #9 being derailed by a crossover, it’s unavoidably a desperate scramble to tie things up by the end. And not a particularly successful one. Moses Magnum isn’t the sort of character you can just bring in as the main villain in the final act, and besides, nothing in his history makes him remotely suitable for his role in the plot here. Zanda is a similarly baffling reveal, unlikely to mean anything to most readers. And Tank turns out to be Colossus, but there’s no time to even gesture at explaining why. Nor is there space to make most of the team members anything more than generic. You can see the broad shape of where the book was meant to be going, but the bottom line is that it’s a puzzle box series that messed up the landing – not entirely through its own fault, but it was taking its sweet time getting to the point anyway. If you’re been reading the series up to this point, you might as well get the last chapter, but there’s no reason for anyone else to spend time on it. Fabian Nicieza and Edgar Salazar contribute a ten-page back-up strip which is basically an opportunity to reflect on the main versions of X-Force down the ages, at least from Cable’s point of view, and does the job well enough for a legacy anniversary issue.
Magik #4 annotations
MAGIK vol 3 #4
“Reunion”
Writer: Ashley Allen
Artist: Germán Peralta
Colour artist: Arthur Hesli
Letterer: Joe Caramagna
Editor: Darren Shan
MAGIK
She said in narration at the end of last issue that Dani was the last person she wanted to see. That seems to be because she’s defensive about her deal with Liminal and doesn’t want to be judged by one of her oldest friends when she knows it’s a mistake. She tries to push back by complaining that Dani doesn’t trust her, but ultimately suggests that she accepted the deal mainly because she was desperate to escape his domain – after all, being trapped in someone else’s magical realm is a traumatic part of her origin story. Dani essentially suggests that Illyana let that sucker her into a bad deal and she should have looked for a better option; Illyana argues that it’s unfair to expect that of her, but privately seems to agree.
The idea seems to be that, as a result of Liminal’s deal, Darkchild is no longer suppressed by outright psychic or magical blocks, but nor is she in control. Instead Illyana has to actively resist the temptation. She initially talks about feeling Darkchild’s anger, and then immediately ascribes the anger to herself. Darkchild seems to be tied to her negative emotions, or perhaps her self-loathing generally – she starts to turn into Darkchild after feeling that Liminal has defeated her, and then gets talked down by Dani. At the end of the story, when she gets upset after overhearing Dani and Cal talking about her, her silhouette has Darkchilde horns.
X-Force #10 annotations
X-FORCE vol 7 #10
“The X-Equation”
Writer: Geoffrey Thorne
Artist: Marcus To
Colour artist: Erick Arciniega
Letterer: Joe Caramanga
Editor: Mark Basso
This is the final issue of the series, and as you might expect, it feels like a desperate rush to the finish line. It’s also legacy issue #300, so the main story gets thirty pages, which helps a bit. There’s also a ten page back-up strip (which we’ll come to) and a three-page cover gallery.
X-FORCE
Forge. According to Sage – who’s apparently right – his powers instinctively directed him to stop Moses Magnum’s scheme, without him ever actually understanding on a conscious level what he was doing. (Yes, Moses Magnum. I know. We’ll come to him.) It turns out that this is not a story about the dangers of blind faith as I’d been thinking – Forge was just right all along to trust in his intuition. Sage claims that Forge was deliberately drip-feeding information to the team (in the sense of it being what his powers told him to do) at the point when it would be most effective to make them stick to the plan. The idea seems to be that Forge knew that he was manipulating everyone to do whatever was required for the plan, even if he didn’t know precisely why it was all meant to work.
Forge is apparently just playing along with Magnum’s attempts to recruit him. Despite Diabla’s clear warnings that she never got the chance to finish testing and preparing Forge, Moses falls for it entirely.
X-Men #15 annotations
X-MEN vol 7 #15
“Twin”
Writer: Jed MacKay
Pencillers, co-inkers: Ryan Stegman & CF Villa
Co-inkers: JP Mayer & Livesay
Colourist: Erick Arciniega
Letterer: Clayton Cowles
Editor: Tom Brevoort
THE X-MEN
Cyclops does his usual team leader routine, and Temper spends the issue trying to save Piper from her twin.
Magik summons up demons from Limbo to help the search operation. We’ve seen her randomly call up demons in the past, despite the fact that Madelyne Pryor is meant to be running Limbo now. On this occasion, she makes the demons an “offer of minionship, short-term”, and lets them drink her blood as the price; she doesn’t seem to have any particular concerns about consequences for this. Perhaps she has to make a more explicit deal if she wants the demons to do something actually useful, instead of just turning them loose and hoping that they cause chaos.
Xorn describes these creatures as “imps”, and there’s nothing to suggest that they aren’t making a sincere effort to carry out their instructions. The imps call Magik “dread mistress”, but it’s not clear whether that’s because of the deal or because of her former status in Limbo. In addressing her demons, she refers to mutants as “witchbreed”, consistently with how they were described in Otherworld during the Krakoan era.
